James F Burke1, Chunyang Feng2, Lesli E Skolarus2. 1. From the Department of Neurology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. jamesbur@med.umich.edu. 2. From the Department of Neurology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To explore racial differences in disability at the time of first postdischarge disability assessment. METHODS: This was a retrospective cohort study of all Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries hospitalized with primary ischemic stroke (ICD-9,433.x1, 434.x1, 436) or intracerebral hemorrhage (431) diagnosed from 2011 to 2014. Racial differences in poststroke disability were measured in the initial postacute care setting (inpatient rehabilitation facility, skilled nursing facility, or home health) with the Pseudo-Functional Independence Measure. Given that assignment into postacute care setting may be nonrandom, patient location during the first year after stroke admission was explored. RESULTS: A total of 390,251 functional outcome assessments (white = 339,253, 87% vs black = 50,998, 13%) were included in the primary analysis. At the initial functional assessment, black patients with stroke had greater disability than white patients with stroke across all 3 postacute care settings. The difference between white and black patients with stroke was largest in skilled nursing facilities (black patients 1.8 points lower than white patients, 11% lower) compared to the other 2 settings. Conversely, 30-day mortality was greater in white patients with stroke compared to black patients with stroke (18.4% vs 12.6% [p < 0.001]) and a 3 percentage point difference in mortality persisted at 1 year. Black patients with stroke were more likely to be in each postacute care setting at 30 days, but only very small differences existed at 1 year. CONCLUSIONS: Black patients with stroke have 30% lower 30-day mortality than white patients with stroke, but greater short-term disability. The reasons for this disconnect are uncertain, but the pattern of reduced mortality coupled with increased disability suggests that racial differences in care preferences may play a role.
OBJECTIVE: To explore racial differences in disability at the time of first postdischarge disability assessment. METHODS: This was a retrospective cohort study of all Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries hospitalized with primary ischemic stroke (ICD-9,433.x1, 434.x1, 436) or intracerebral hemorrhage (431) diagnosed from 2011 to 2014. Racial differences in poststroke disability were measured in the initial postacute care setting (inpatient rehabilitation facility, skilled nursing facility, or home health) with the Pseudo-Functional Independence Measure. Given that assignment into postacute care setting may be nonrandom, patient location during the first year after stroke admission was explored. RESULTS: A total of 390,251 functional outcome assessments (white = 339,253, 87% vs black = 50,998, 13%) were included in the primary analysis. At the initial functional assessment, black patients with stroke had greater disability than white patients with stroke across all 3 postacute care settings. The difference between white and black patients with stroke was largest in skilled nursing facilities (black patients 1.8 points lower than white patients, 11% lower) compared to the other 2 settings. Conversely, 30-day mortality was greater in white patients with stroke compared to black patients with stroke (18.4% vs 12.6% [p < 0.001]) and a 3 percentage point difference in mortality persisted at 1 year. Black patients with stroke were more likely to be in each postacute care setting at 30 days, but only very small differences existed at 1 year. CONCLUSIONS: Black patients with stroke have 30% lower 30-day mortality than white patients with stroke, but greater short-term disability. The reasons for this disconnect are uncertain, but the pattern of reduced mortality coupled with increased disability suggests that racial differences in care preferences may play a role.
Authors: Dawn Kleindorfer; Christopher Lindsell; Kathleen A Alwell; Charles J Moomaw; Daniel Woo; Matthew L Flaherty; Pooja Khatri; Opeolu Adeoye; Simona Ferioli; Brett M Kissela Journal: Stroke Date: 2012-07-05 Impact factor: 7.914
Authors: Dawn O Kleindorfer; Jane Khoury; Charles J Moomaw; Kathleen Alwell; Daniel Woo; Matthew L Flaherty; Pooja Khatri; Opeolu Adeoye; Simona Ferioli; Joseph P Broderick; Brett M Kissela Journal: Stroke Date: 2010-05-20 Impact factor: 7.914
Authors: Adam de Havenon; Varsha Muddasani; Marissa Castillo; Kevin N Sheth; Alen Delic; Ali Herman; Mark Conaway; Karen C Johnston Journal: J Stroke Cerebrovasc Dis Date: 2021-08-26 Impact factor: 2.136
Authors: Allison Willis; Lesli E Skolarus; Roland Faigle; Uma Menon; Hannah Redwine; Amanda M Brown; Elizabeth Felton; Adys Mendizabal; Avindra Nath; Frances Jensen; Justin C McArthur Journal: Ann Neurol Date: 2021-08-05 Impact factor: 11.274
Authors: Hammad Ghanchi; Tye Patchana; James Wiginton; Jonathan D Browne; Ai Ohno; Ronit Farahmandian; Jason Duong; Vladimir Cortez; Dan E Miulli Journal: Cureus Date: 2020-09-10